Tata, Singapore Airlines may bid for Air India: Vistara CEO
New Delhi : India’s Tata Group and Singapore Airlines are open to potentially bidding for the indebted carrier Air India, a top official at a joint venture owned by the firms said yesterday.
Air India, which was founded in the 1930s by the Tata Group and nationalised in 1953, is saddled with a debt of $8.5 billion. The Indian government agreed last June to sell it, after multiple efforts to resurrect the business failed.
Leslie Thng, chief executive of Vistara, a carrier launched jointly by the Tata Group and Singapore Airlines in 2015, said at a news conference on Friday that the companies were “open to evaluating bids for Air India.”
“They keep an open mind,” Thng said, without elaborating.
It was not immediately clear if the companies might bid jointly or separately.
Tata Group Chairman N. Chandrasekaran said late last year the company would be interested in bidding for Air India.
Vistara’s Thng, at the conference, also said the group would lease five more A320neo aircraft by June 2018. Vistara currently has a total of 17 aircrafts on lease including four of the fuel-efficient A320neos.
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